I recently interviewed Gregg Holzrichter, the VP of Marketing for Virsto Software, about two of his company's recently announced products: Virsto 2.0 for Hyper-V, and the first release of Virsto for VMware vSphere. Virsto hopes that these products will help IT administrators make more effective use of their storage by leveraging virtualization.

Some of Virsto's primary competitors include Datacore, Falconstor, and IBM's System Storage SAN Volume Controller (SVC), but Holzrichter thinks that Virsto's approach is more effective."With Virsto, our vision was to do for storage what hypervisors did for servers," Holzrichter explained. "[Our competitors] may be coming at virtual storage from the array and the LUN, but we're the only vendor solving storage virtualization from a VM-centric perspective."

Unlike many other vendors in the virtualization market who first launched products for VMware, Virsto decided to focus their efforts on Microsoft Hyper-V first."We chose to do that [support Hyper-V first] partly because of the technical hooks in Hyper-V," Holzrichter said. "Hyper-V was less functionally complete a few years ago, and that strategy turned out to be a good bet for us."

According to a Virsto news release announcing the availability of Virsto for Hyper-V 2.0, the new version provides the following features (Source: Virsto Software news release):

I asked Holzrichter about Virsto's support for allthe new Windows Server 8 storage features that Microsoft revealed earlier this year, and Holzrichter said that Virsto plans to take advantage of all the features that made sense for them. "We're still looking at the new feature set in Windows Server 8...we'll also be supporting the entire System Center 2012 stack."

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